• r00ty@kbin.life
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    4 months ago

    What if I told you, businesses routinely do this to their own machines in order to make a deliberate MitM attack to log what their employees do?

    In this case, it’d be a really targetted attack to break into their locally hosted server, to steal the CA key, and also install a forced VPN/reroute in order to service up MitM attacks or similar. And to what end? Maybe if you’re a billionaire, I’d suggest not doing this. Otherwise, I’d wonder why you’d (as in the average user) be the target of someone that would need to spend a lot of time and money doing the reconnaissance needed to break in to do anything bad.

    • BestBouclettes@jlai.lu
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      4 months ago

      I’m talking about home hosting and private keys. Not businesses with people whose full time job is to make sure everything runs fine.
      I’m a nobody and I regularly have people/bots testing my router. I’m not monitoring my whole setup yet and if someone gets in I would probably not notice until it’s too late.
      So hosting my own CA is a hassle and a security risk I’m not willing to put work into.

    • Findmysec@infosec.pub
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      4 months ago

      Ah, you mean they put the cert in a transparent proxy which logs all traffic? Neat idea, I should try it at home

      • r00ty@kbin.life
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        4 months ago

        They (the service that provides both web protection and logging) installs their own root certificate. Then creates certs for sites on demand, and it will route web traffic through their own proxy, yes.

        It’s why I don’t do anything personal at all on the work laptop. I know they have logs of everything everyone does.